Lead Opinion
Plaintiff, a resident of Alaska, has sued defendant Stotler and Company, a futures commission merchant (“FCM”)
According to the complaint and plaintiffs affidavit filed in opposition to the motion to dismiss, plaintiff opened an account with defendant Stotler and Company through its agent Wilson and his company Wilpadco in early 1981 when a Stotler and Company Customer’s Agreement was signed by one of defendant’s partners and plaintiff. During four weeks in September 1982, nine unauthorized trades for the sale and purchase of gold and silver futures were charged to plaintiff’s account with defendant, causing him losses of $59,150. These transactions were conducted by Wilson and Wilpadco, with commissions going to defendant. Plaintiff contends that he never traded in gold and silver futures. Wilson on his own initiative allegedly called plaintiff and told him of the first few trades and said they would be reversed since they were defendant Stotler and Company’s mistakes. Plaintiff then discovered more unauthorized trades on his statement from defendant and in September and October 1982 notified Wilson who again told him that the trades were defendant’s mistakes and would be reversed. The losses from the unauthorized trades remained on later statements but Wilson reassured him that defendant would refund the losses from those trades and later that the trades had in fact been reversed out but that plaintiff was misreading the statements.
When plaintiff’s accountant discovered in August 1983 that the unauthorized trades still had not been reversed out, plaintiff wrote a letter to defendant requesting reimbursement and had that letter hand-delivered to Wilson. Allegedly, Wilson admitted that the trades were unauthorized and in late August 1983 he and Wilpadco apparently arranged for $15,483.21 to be transferred to plaintiff’s account with defendant. Wilson also orally agreed to pay $5,000 a month into plaintiff’s account with defendant to reimburse the remaining amount owed to plaintiff. When Wilson failed to make the September and October payments, plaintiff in November 1983 had Wilson sign an agreement to reimburse the rest of the charges plus interest in monthly payments of $1,000, with the first due on Decembеr 1, 1983. Wilson and Wilpadco are said to have acted with “express, implied or apparent authority” of defendant, and none of the three has made any subsequent payments to plaintiff.
The complaint charges violations of the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.), common law fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, violations of the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act (Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 121½ ¶¶ 261-272), and breach of the repayment agreement.
Prior to answering the complaint, defendant filed a motion to dismiss, relying on a one-year limitation clause in paragraph 14 of the Customer’s Agreement with plaintiff, and in a reply memorandum filed in the district court also asserted that plaintiff’s claim based on the repayment agreement (Count VII) was barred by paragraph 20 of the Customer’s Agreement relieving Stotler and Company of any liability from activities of its independent agents. The district court agreed. Cange v. Stotler and Co., No. 85 C 7664, Comm.Fut.L.Rep. (CCH) ¶ 23,176 (N.D.Ill. May 2, 1986) [Available on WESTLAW, DCT database]. The district judge treated the motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment because both parties referred to matters outside the pleadings. See Rule 12(b)(6) of Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. A judgment dismissing the case followed. We reverse.
I
Absent estoppel, one-year contractual limitations period applies to this case.
Paragraph 14 of the Customer’s Agreement provides as follows:
*584 14. Customer agrees that any controversy between us arising out of this Agreement, regardless of the manner of resolution, shall be arbitrated, litigated (tried in a Court of Law), or resolved by a tribunal located in Illinois. Stotler agrees to reimburse me, should Stotler be unsuccessful in any such proceedings, for reasonable expenses incurred for such dispute or resolution over that which would have resulted in a locale in which Customer would have been entitled by law to dispute our differences. Customer agrees to pay all expenses, including attorney’s fees, incurred by Stotler to defend any unsuccessful claim Customer brings against Stotler. No legal or administrative action may be commenced by anyone arising out of this contract after one year after any claim arises. Customer hereby expressly acknowledges that the Agreement contemplated hereby is an Agreement made in the State of Illinois (upon acceptance by Stotler in Illinois), and further, that by virtue of trading commodity futures in the account established hereby, by and through Stotler, Customer is transacting business in the State of Illinois; accordingly, Customer hereby expressly acknowledges and agrees that Customer has submitted and consents to jurisdiction of his person in the Courts of the State of Illinois and, thus, that Customer shall be amenable to service of summons and other legal process of, and emanating from, the State of Illinois, regarding this Agreement. (Emphasis supplied.)
Plaintiff contends that such a limitations period violates public policy. However, it is well settled that courts will ordinarily uphold contractual limitations periods of one year or more. Florsheim v. Travelers Indemnity Co.,
Plaintiff’s public policy argument is premised on the critical importance of a private right of action to enforce commodity laws. That principle has been recognized by the Supreme Court, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Curran,
As to the three-year limitations period provided in the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act (Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 121½ ¶ 270a(e)), plaintiff has been unable to cite any pertinent authority condemning a shorter limitations provision such as the one-year period provided in
II
Estoppel may bar defendant from raising limitations defense.
The conduct complained of occurred from September 2 to 29, 1982, but plaintiff did not file his action until November 21, 1984, in Alaska state court and that suit was dismissed with the reservation of plaintiff’s right to bring an action in Illinois. Defendant admitted in its motion to dismiss that for purposes of the limitations period plaintiff’s suit was filed on November 21, 1984, the date the Alaska suit was filed. Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss ¶ 5 (Sept. 27, 1985). The 2-year and 2-month delay in filing this lawsuit would bar plaintiff’s first six counts based on the Customer’s Agreement if it were not for the material issues of fact that exist concerning whether the conduct of defendant’s agent Wilson equitably estopped defendant from asserting the defense of the limitations period.
A
The federal doctrine of equitable estoppel applies to actions brought in federal courts at law and equity. Glus v. Brooklyn Eastern Dist. Terminal,
Plaintiff’s federal claims are based on an implied right of action — the causes of action having accrued prior to the enactment of the express right of action in 7 U.S.C. § 25 — and we have held that the three-year limitations period in the Illinois securities laws applies to implied rights of action under the Commodity Exchange Act. Andrews v. Heinold Commodities, Inc.,
The existence of the federal doctrine of equitable estoppel is independent of the particular statute of limitations, whether it is federal or borrowed from state law, and thus we have to apply the federal doctrine' to the two federal claims. As Judge Bauer explained for this Court in Bomba:
Tolling, strictly speaking, is concerned with the point at which the limitations period begins to run and with the circumstances in which the running of the limitations period may be suspended. These are matters in large measure governed by the language of the statute of limitations itself____ Equitable estoppel, however, is a different matter. It is not concerned with the running and suspension of the limitations period, but rather comes into play only after the limitations period has run and addresses itself to the circumstances in which a party will be estopped from asserting the statute of limitations as a defense to an admittedly untimely action because his conduct has induced another into forbearing suit within the applicable limitations period. Its application is wholly independent of the limitations period itself and takes its life, not from the language of the statute, but from the equitable principle that no man will be permitted to profit from his own wrongdoing in a court of justice. Thus, because equitable estoppel operates directly on the defendant without abrogating the running of the limitations period as provided by statute, it might apply no matter how unequivocally the applicable limitations period is expressed.
The concurrence herein suggests that Bomba is no longer authoritative in view of the Supreme Court’s decisions of Wilson v.
Having concluded that the federal doctrine of equitable estoppel is applicable to plaintiffs two federal claims,
Though it is widely held that mere negotiations concerning a, disputed claim, without more, is insufficient to warrant the application of equitable estoppel, ... the cases are legion that a promise to pay a claim will estop a defendant from asserting the applicable statute of limitations of the plaintiff, relied in good faith on defendant’s promise in forbearing suit____ Moreover, it is not necessary that the defendant intentionally mislead or deceive the plaintiff, or even intend by its conduct to induce delay.
The district court erred in ordering dismissal of the two federal claims because plaintiff’s affidavit filed in response to the motion to dismiss set out material issues of fact creating a jury question whether defendant was estopped from raising the issue of the limitations period. Assuming the facts alleged by plaintiff to be true, a jury could conclude that defendant’s agent Wilson caused plaintiff not to be concerned over the unauthorized trades by contacting him by telephone, informing him of them, and telling him that defendant Stotler and Company had caused the mistake and would reverse the losses. Upon plaintiff’s inquiries in late September and October 1982 regarding additional' unauthorized trades, Wilson assured plaintiff that they were a mistake and would be reversed. Over the next 10 months Wilson continued to lull plaintiff into not filing suit by assuring him that the charges were defendant’s mistake and would be reversed and then that they had been reversed but plaintiff was simply misreading the statements. In August 1983, still within one year of the illegal conduct, Wilson again admitted the trades were unauthorized, arranged for part of the questioned amount to be paid in order to placate plaintiff with the appearance of settlement, and promised to refund the balance in monthly increments of $5,000. Wilson renewed this promise in September and October upon missing each payment and then signed a written agreement in November 1983 to pay the remainder owed in monthly increments of $1,000. Plaintiff brought suit in Alaska in November 1984, within one year after Wilson’s failure to make the first payment on December 1, 1983.
As for the state law claims, under Illinois law, equitable estoppel can bar a defendant’s assertion of the expiration of the limitations period. Florsheim v. Travelers Indemnity Co.,
B
The district court here erred in holding that defendant could not be estopped from asserting the limitations period due to defendant’s lack of knowledge of or participation in its independent agent’s conduct. Defendant admits that for purposes of this motion to dismiss or summary judgment motion Wilson must be assumed to be the agent of Stotler and Company, as the complaint alleges, and in fact there is much evidence to support the existence of an agency relationship: Wilson handled plaintiff’s account with Stotler and Company; the Customer Agreement he gave plaintiff had Stotler and Company’s name on it; the trades he executed on plaintiff’s account were reflected on Stotler and Company confirmation slips and account statements; and Stotler and Company received commissions for executing the trades. Nosser v. Northwest Commodities, Comm.Fut.L.Rep. (CCH) ¶ 23,470 (CFTC ALJ Feb. 9, 1987); Gadberry v. Daniels, Comm.Fut.L.Rep. (CCH) ¶ 22,904, at 31,614-31,615. We concluded in Rosenthal & Co. v. Commodity Futures Trading Commission,
Plaintiff’s first six counts are solely based on his losses from the alleged unauthorized trades made in violation of federal and state statutes and common law.
The unauthorized trades by Wilson could be found to be within the scope of his agency with Stotler and Company and so too could his conduct that is alleged to have caused plaintiff not to file suit within the one-year limitations period. Wilson’s acknowledgments that the trades were unauthorized and that plaintiff’s correct account balance was different from that shown on
Wilson’s promises to plaintiff that the losses from the unauthorized trades would be refunded could also be found to be acts within the scope of his agency with defendant and, as such, would be admissible to estop defendant’s assertion of a limitations defensе. A customer has an “absolute right not to incur liability for any trade not authorized by him.” Sherwood v. Madda Trading Co., Comm.Fut.L.Rep. (CCH) ¶ 20,728, at 23,018 (CFTC Jan. 5, 1979); see Hunter v. Madda Trading Co., Comm.Fut.L.Rep. (CCH) ¶ 21,242, at 25,205 (CFTC Sept. 2, 1981). The failure of the FCM’s agent to inform the customer of this absolute right to a refund can defeat the FCM’s otherwise valid defense, based on a customer’s untimely request for a refund, that the customer ratified the trade. Hill v. Bache Halsey Stuart Shields, Inc.,
Here the trier of fact could find that Wilson’s statements of the “correct” account balance and his promises of a refund for the unauthorized trades were acts within the scope of the inherent agency power of a person like Wilson handling a customer’s account for an FCM. See Restatement (Second) of Agency §§ 8A, 161 (1958). Stotler and Company allowed Wilson to act as its agent in handling plaintiff’s account, and absent proof that Stotler and Company informed plaintiff • that Wilson would not have the customary power of a person in a similar agency relationship, the defendant is bound by the acts of its agent no matter its sеcret limitations to the contrary. This Court has before observed that “[t]he powers of an agent are, prima facia, coextensive with the business intrusted to his care, and will not be narrowed by limitations not communicated to the person with whom he deals.” Lumbermen’s Mut. Ins. Co. v. Slide Rule & Scale Eng’g Co.,
The trier of fact could find that it is within the customary authority of an FCM’s agent handling a customer’s account to make statements of the account’s correct balance and to promise refunds for losses from unauthorized trades. Thus the plaintiff’s reliance on those statements and promises, notwithstanding contrary figures listed on the account statement issued by Stotler and Company, could be found to be reasonable. As such, the plaintiff’s failure to bring suit within the one-year limitations period could be found to be attributable to Wilson’s statements, and Stotler and Company would be estopped from asserting the bar of the limitations period. Here there were triable issues of fact regarding whether Wilson’s acts dissuading plaintiff from timely bringing suit were within the scope of Wilson’s agency with defendant and therefore summary judgment should have been denied on the first six counts. See Thompson v. Phenix Ins. Co.,
Defendant argues that Wilson lacked the “apparent authority” fоr his actions to es-top Stotler and Company from asserting the bar of the limitations period. First, defendant argues that plaintiff has failed to show “a single action on Stotler’s part to create apparent authority” of Wilson (Def. Br. 18), but plaintiff need not prove any actions on Stotler and Company’s part besides its allowing Wilson to act as its agent for handling plaintiff’s account because the trier of fact could find Wilson’s statements within his inherent authority. Representations of the principal to the third party are central for defining apparent authority, but in contrast, inherent authority originates from the customary authority of a person in the particular type of agency relationship and no representations beyond the fact of the existence of the agency need be shown. See Restatement (Second) of Agency § 161 comment b (1958). Compare id. at § 8 with id. at § 8A. See generally id. at §§ 194-195 (inherent agency power can subject undisclosed principal to liability for acts of his or her agent).
Defendant’s second argument is that the Customer's Agreement notified plaintiff that Stotler and Company’s agents lacked authority to bind Stotler and Company on matters concerning customers’ complaints. Defendant’s Br. 18. The defendant cites paragraph 2 of the Customer’s Agreement, which states in bold-face type:
2. This contract is the entire Agreement between us and no provisions hereof shall in any respect be waived or modified unless in writing and signed by a Partner of Stotler and Company. Customer acknowledges that no person other than a partner has authority to modify or waive the provisions of the Agreement or*592 to establish customs and practices of trading contrary to the terms of this Agreement.
This provision only affects the agent’s authority to modify the Customer Agreement and does not itself address the agent’s inherent authority to deal with the customer on matters of the account balance and refunds for unauthorized trades.
Defendant claims that under paragraph 20 it notified plaintiff that it was not liable for the acts of its agents of which it has “no actual prior knowledge or participation.” The concurrence apparently agrees with this position. See concurring opinion at p. 597. That paragraph states:
20. Customer acknowledges that Stotler’s performance hereunder, as principals, may result from activities of independent agents for whose activities Stotler may be technically legally liable. Customer agrees to waive any claims against, and to indemnify, defend, save and hold free аnd harmless Stotler for any activities of its independent agents or their employees of which Stotler has no actual prior knowledge or participation, and for any activities of Non-Employee Commodity Pool Operators or Commodity Trading Advisors.
This paragraph is an exculpatory clause purporting to relieve defendant of liability for damages caused by its agents for which it would otherwise be responsible, and, as such, it must be strictly construed. See United States v. Seckinger,
Paragraph 20 does not deprive defendant’s agents of any inherent authority to make statements on customers’ correct account balances and rights to a refund because such conduct does not create damages liability but merely recognizes the FCM’s (and the agent’s) liability if the underlying conduct creating liability — in this case the unauthorized trades — has actually occurred. If the trier of fact concludes that Wilson’s conduct was within the scope of his agency authority, inherent or otherwise, and lulled plaintiff into inaction and that plaintiff’s reliance on Wilson’s conduct was reasonable, then estoppel would bar the assertion of the limitations defense. Paragraphs 2 and 20 of the Customer Agreement are irrelevant to this inquiry. Defendant’s motion as to the first six counts should have been denied.
Ill
Repayment agreement Count VII is not barred by Customer’s Agreement.
Count VII of the complaint seeks damages from defendant because defendant, Wilson and Wilpadco have not repaid plaintiff $43,666.79 of the $59,150 loss, plus 10% interest.
The district court held that the repayment agreement was inconsistent with paragraph 20 of the Customer’s Agreement and therefore dismissed Count VII. Defendant’s brief in this Court relies on paragraph 20 and adopts the district court’s reasoning that Stotler and Company could not be liable for breach of the repayment agreement because it had no prior knowledge of the agreement and could not be bound by the acts of its agent absent such knowledge. Defendant’s Br. 6, 17, 19. However, at the oral argument, defendant conceded that under Rosenthal & Co. v. Commodity Futures Trading Commission,
Defendant argues that those general propositions do not apply to its defense of Count VII because Wilson’s entering the repayment agreement did not violate the Commodity Exchange Act and thus it can disavow such an act even if it is within the scope of its agent’s authority. There is nothing in 7 U.S.C. § 4 limiting respondeat superior liability only to violations of the Commodity Exchange Act; rather, the fo
Section 2(a)(1) [(codified at 7 U.S.C. § 4) ], which dates back to 1921, enacts a variant of the common law principle of respondeat superior____ The resemblance to the tort doctrine is so close ... and the language of the statute so clear — it expressly imputes the agent’s wrongdoing to the principal — that we have no doubt that section 2(a)(1) imposes strict liability on the principal (Rosenthal), provided, of course, as the statute also states expressly, that the agent’s misconduct was within the scope or (equivalently but more precisely) in furtherance of the agency.
Plaintiff argues that paragraph 20 violates public policy. It could indeed be contrary to public policy by operating as a prospective waiver of the customer’s right to hold the FCM liable for losses caused by its agents acting within the scope of their authority and thus tending to encourage violations of the law. Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.,
We need not resolve this difficult question because narrower grounds make improper the granting of summary judgment against plaintiff on this count. The essence of Count VII is that the repayment agreement is itself enforceable against Stotler and Company, regardless of the collectibility of the losses from the unauthorized trades. The trier of fact could conclude that Wilson entered this agreement in furtherance of his agency with Stotler and Company. Although Wilson did not sign the repayment agreement as “an agent of Stotler and Company,” that does not preclude Stotler and Company’s contractual liability as a disclosed principal, unless Wilson and plaintiff intended otherwise. See Restatement (Second) of Agency §§ 149, 153, 155 (1958). The repayment agreement begins by stating: “The following trades were made in error to my Stotler & Co. account # 966 11167:” and then proceeds to list the nine unauthorized transactions and the losses incurred. The amount agreed to be paid is referred to as “the balance of the losses still unrecovered.” The trier of fact could conclude that the parties intended that Stotler and Company, the disclosed principal of Wilson, would be liable for this amount.
The district court erred in holding that paragraph 20 absolutely prevented Stotler and Company from being liable under the repayment agreement. Paragraph 20, if valid, relieves defendant for some acts of its agents that create liability, see supra at p. 592, but by its own terms does not apply to acts of which defendant had knowledge or in which it participated. If Wilson’s signing the repayment agreement was within his actual authority, then paragraph 20 does not apply because defendant had “knowledge” of its agent’s actual authority. With this the concurrence аgrees. See concurring opinion at p. 598. Additionally, paragraph 20 does not cover acts within the agent’s inherent authority. The establishing of Wilson as its agent to handle plaintiff’s account was “participation” in any subsequent acts of Wilson that were within the scope of his inherent authority to execute that agency. The vague restrictions in paragraph 20 do not adequately notify Stotler and Company’s customers that its agents lack the customary authority of agents of other FCMs to deal with complaints of unauthorized trades. The scope of Wilson’s actual and inherent authority are issues of fact and cannot be resolved based on the present limited record. The district court should not have granted defendant’s summary judgment motion against Count VII. Circuit Rule 36 will apply on remand.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
. A "futures commission merchant” is an individual or firm "engaged in soliciting or in accepting orders for the purchase or sale of any commodity for future delivery on or subject to the rules of any contract market and that, in or in connection with such solicitation or acceptanee of orders, accepts any money, securities, or property (or extends credit in lieu thereof) to margin, guarantee, or secure any trades or contracts that result or may result therefrom.” 7 U.S.C. § 2,
. This case is before us as an appeal of the granting of a motion to dismiss/summary judgment motion prior to the filing of an answer to the complaint. The concurrence’s unusual position that we should refrain from discussing the federal and state statutory claims merely because recovery may turn on the same facts that comprise Count VII would deprive plaintiff of his statutory rights. Of course multiple recoveries for the same injury will not be allowed but plaintiff, can pursue in the district court his multiple theories entitling him to recover. It follows that our discussion of the reasons why those federal and state statutory claims were improperly dismissed is not dicta.
Additionally, the viability of the two counts alleging violations of the Commodity Exchange Act, which survive the bar of the contractual limitations period only due to equitable estoppel, may be of crucial importance because the existence of diversity jurisdiction is unclear. Stotler and Company is apparently a partnership and the citizenship of the various partners, necessary information for ascertaining the presence of diversity jurisdiction, is not alleged in the complaint. See Stockman v. LaCroix,
. The later case of Wilson v. Garcia,
. In fact, even if those decisions applied to equitable estoppel, which they do not, this might not make inapplicable the federal doctrine of equitable estoppel. As already discussed, in implied federal securities actions tolling doctrines are borrowed from state law but Suslick holds that a federal doctrine of equitable tolling also applies. Of course, this appeal does not involve equitable tolling and we put aside for another day arguments over the correctness of Suslick.
. Because the federal doctrine of equitable estoppel is based on deeply rooted common law principles, it is not surprising that it resembles Illinois principles of equitable estoppel. Contrary to the suggestion in the concurrence, the congruity of the federal and Illinois doctrines of equitable estoppel under the facts of this particular case would not justify our application of the Illinois estoppel dоctrine to the federal claims. The correct theoretical approach has already been laid out in Bomba, and our ignoring it would invite future imprecise legal analysis (or mistaken pronouncements of the distinction’s demise).
. Count VII is treated separately from the first six counts because it is based on the promise to pay in the repayment agreement and assumes that the loss from the unauthorized trades is otherwise uncollectible. See infra Part III.
. Inherent authority not only can differ from apparent authority but also from actual authority. Unlike actual authority, inherent authority cannot be limited by secret instructions to an agent restricting his or her customary authority. Kidd v. Thomas A. Edison, Inc.,
. Defendant argues in its brief that plaintiff failed to notify Stotler and Company as required by paragraph 6 of the Customer’s Agreement and as reiterated, though with less clarity, on the trade confirmation slips. Def. Br. 7, 19. That paragraph requires that all complaints be made in writing and sent to Stotler and Company's Compliance Department in Chicago. Cases have held that oral notice to defendant's agent handling the customer’s account is sufficiеnt to put the FCM on notice of the unauthorized trades, even when there is a contract provision requiring written notice to the FCM. Baker v. Stotler & Co., Comm.Fut.L.Rep. ¶ 21,994, at 28,-373 (CFTC ALJ Jan. 31, 1984); Blome v. R.G. Dickinson & Co., Comm.Fut.L.Rep. ¶ 21,916, at 27,969-27,970 (CFTC ALJ Nov. 18, 1983); see Union Ins. Exchange v. Gaul,
It also has been held that the FCM’s agent’s conduct can amount to a waiver of the no-waiver provision in the contract and a fortiori the written notification provision. Anspacher & Assocs., Inc. v. Haugen, No. 83 C 3253 (N.D.Ill. June 16, 1987) (Grady, J.) [Available on WEST-LAW, DCT database] (available on Lexis) ("If [the FCM’s agent] assured [the customer] that he could handle all his problems with the accounts, and that he was the person to receive all reports of improprieties, he might be found to have waived not only the notification provisions of Section V of the Customer Agreement, but compliance with [the no-modification provisions of] Section III as well.”); cf. also Hill v. Bache Halsey Stuart Shields, Inc.,
. The amount sought in Count VII is $52,400 plus interest at the rate of 10%. Since the repayment agreement of November 11, 1983 shows that the then unrecovered losses were $43,666.79, the sum of $52,400 apparently includes unpaid interest accrued to September 3, 1985, when the federal complaint was filed.
. See Poplar Grove Planting & Refining Co. v. Bache Halsey Stuart, Inc.,
. The recent case of Shearson/American Express, Inc. v. McMahon, — U.S. -,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
Paragraph 20 of Stotler’s contract with Cange relieves Stotler of liability arising from thе unauthorized and unratified acts of Wilson and his firm Wilpadco. Stotler concedes that this clause is unenforceable under 7 U.S.C. § 4 to the extent it frees Stotler from liability for unauthorized trades. Cf. Rosenthal & Co. v. CFTC, 802
As Part I of the court’s opinion holds, people may vary by contract many terms on which they will deal in the commodities trade. The securities laws contain no-waiver provisos, see 15 U.S.C. §§ 77n, 78cc(a), but the commodities laws do not. Cf. Shearson/American Express, Inc. v. McMahon, - U.S. -,
The Supreme Court has not embraced decisions invalidating contracts on the rationale that they violate “public policy”. E.g., Ricketts v. Adamson, - U.S. -,
Contracts rarely defeat the function of the statute so utterly that they may be set aside. A statutory right affects the initial bargaining position of the parties, so that the contract affords people the benefits of the statute even as it alters the rules. The beneficiary of the statutory right may enjoy it or trade it for something he prefers; when a court observes that the right has been surrendered (traded) in a contract, it may not leap to the conclusion that the statutory plan has been defeated. The contract tells us only that the parties valued something else more highly. To forbid the contractual waiver is to make the class of statutory beneficiaries worse off, by depriving them of the opportunity to obtain the benefits of the statutory entitlement by using it as a bargaining chip in the process of contracting. For example, Cange might have received the benefit of Stotler’s greater willingness to have an agent in Alaska; the high costs of monitoring a distant agent may lead the principal to cut off dealing through agents if it cannot control its liability. Perhaps instead Cange received a lower rate of commission than Stotler would have required, if Stotler were absolutely liable for Wilson's doings. Having enjoyed the benefits of his contract, Cange cannot have absolute liability to boot. Ricketts, Rumery, Evans, and Shearson allow contractual surrender of express rights, including the right to file suit. In the long run, Learned Hand reminds us, it is better to enforce even one-sided commercial bargains than to tinker with their terms in the hope of improving things. James Baird Co. v. Gimbel Bros., Inc.,
The majority distinguishes Shearson on the ground that it involved a contract for arbitration, a supposed favorite of the law. This is not a sound distinction. There was a long history of judicial hostility to arbitration contracts, even while courts were enforcing all other aspects of the most one-sided deals. The Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq., was designed to reverse “centuries of judicial hostility” to arbitration, Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co.,
The common law contains elaborate rules governing the enforceability of contracts. Cange does not rely on them, for good reason. As we said recently when enforcing a contract allowing a futures merchant to keep the interest on deposited funds: “People with sufficient financial savvy to invest in such speculative things as commodities futures should be able to understand such contractual provisions and, if they do not like them, negotiate something different____ Just as the Act permits investors to choose the trades they make, it permits them to arrange their relationship with their brokers” by contract. Craig v. Refco, Inc.,
Still, we take concessions of parties seriously. Given Stotler’s concession that Paragraph 20 may not properly relieve it from liability for Wilson’s wrongdoing, the portion of the court’s opinion addressing the enforceability of exculpatory clauses in general is dictum. I have addressed the subject at length only because the panel’s unnecessary discussion should not be taken as truth accepted by all judges of the court. The same consideration leads me to question other unnecessary exposition in the majority’s opinion.
Cange seeks to recover based on Wilson’s promise as well as Wilson’s wrongdoing. Stotler concedes the unenforceability of Paragraph 20 only to the extent it affects Stotler’s liability for Wilson’s misconduct; it relies on Paragraph 20 to fend off Cange’s claim based on Wilson’s promise of compensation. Even the express no-waiver provisions in the securities laws forbid only attempts to relieve people of duties imposed by statute. See Shearson,
Yet Paragraph 20’s “validity” ultimately does not matter. The majority ultimately says that the contract between Cange and Wilson is enforceable against Stotler only to the extent it reflects liability for trades that were in fact unauthorized. As I read the court's opinion, Stotler need not compensate Cange, contract or no contract, for trades that were in fact authorized — no matter Wilson’s concession to the contrary. Some language looks in a different direction, such as the repeated references to an agent’s “inherent authority” to do certain things. I do not understand my colleagues to add, to the categories of actual and apparent authority, the new brand of “inherent” authority. If a limit known to third parties confines the agent’s actual authority, then there is also no authority at all. The third party (here, Cange) cannot get around this actual, known limitation by appealing to “inherent” authority. Neither agents nor third parties may engage in such bootstrapping.
Paragraph 20, valid or not, establishes in conjunction with several other provisions of this contract that Wilson did not have apparent authority to bind Stotler to such a promise. Wilson also did not purport to speak for Stotler; his promise to compensate Cange is signed only by Wilson as agent for Wilpadco. Stotler’s name does not appear on the document. And if Wilson had actual authority, Stotler is on the hook under the terms of Paragraph 20. So I concur in the remand. The district court must decide whether Wilson had the authority to commit Stotler to pay Cange a sum that may exceed Cange’s actual loss from unauthorized trades.
If Wilson had the authority to bind Stotler, then Cange recovers under the contract. The claim directly under the Commodity Exchange Act is superfluous. If Wilson did not have the authority to bind Stotler, then Cange loses under the contract and also under the statute, for only Wilson's promises (and failure to pay) arguably permit Cange to sue so long after the last trade that Cange believes was unauthorized.
The only basis on which Cange. could have waited as long as he did was Wilson’s promise to compensate Cange and subsequent default. If the promise was outside the scope of Wilson’s agency, Wilson’s failure to pay cannot estop Stotler. So both the statutory and the contractual claims turn on the same issue — Wilson’s authority to bind Stotler to pay Cange. Because the statutory claim is unnecessary if Cange recovers under the promise, cf. 7 U.S.C. § 25(b), the bulk of the discussion in Part II of the court’s opinion is unnecessary. We need not discuss estoppel on a statutory claim that stands or falls with the contractual claim discussed in Part III.
The analysis of Part II also is questionable, although any flaws do not affect the outcome. My colleagues say that although state law supplies both the statute of limitations (or, more accurately, the principles by which the one-year period set by contract must be assessed) and the “tolling” rules, federal law supplies the “estoppel” rules. This distinction is unnecessary, because the cases collected supra at 588 show that the estoppel rules of Illinois are identical to the federal estoppel rules in
State law governs the period of limitations, if at all, only because of the Rules of Decision Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1652.
My colleagues say that tolling and estoppel are different. True enough, but it does not follow that federal law should govern estoppel even though state law governs tolling. Both doctrines affect the timeliness of suits and interact with the length of the period of limitations. The Supreme Court has not suggested that the formal difference between tolling and estoppel calls for the use of different sources of law. Its decisions look the other way. Wilson, for example, says that the federal court should borrow the state’s period of limitations and “closely related questions of tolling and application” (
Any period of limitation ... is understood fully only in the context of the various circumstances that suspend it from running against a particular cause of action. Although any statute of limitations is necessarily arbitrary, the length of the period allowed for instituting suit inevitably reflects a value judgment concerning the point at which the interests in favor of protecting valid claims are outweighed by the interests in prohibiting the prosecution of stale ones. In virtually all statutes of limitations the chronological length of the limitation period is interrelated with provisions regarding tolling, revival, and questions of application. In borrowing a state period of limitation for application to a federal cause of action, a federal court is relying on the State’s wisdom in setting a limit, and exceptions thereto, on the prosecution of a closely analogous claim.
These cases do not allow a court to pick a tolling rule from state law and an estoppel rule from federal law. Rules governing interruption, renewal, revival, application, and similar exceptions must come from the same body of law that supplies the period of limitations. Cases in this circuit that predate Wilson, Chardon, Tomanio, and Johnson are no longer authoritative. The proposition that federal courts should “stack” the tolling periods of state and federal law is supported by Suslick but inconsistent with decisions of the Supreme Court. Norris and Hemmings reserve decision on this question because it was not briefed and did not affect the outcome. The question was not briefed (all parties relied wholly on state tolling rules) and does not affect the outcome here, either; the panel therefore properly reserves final judgment on the subject (587 n. 4). As none of this affects the disposition of today’s case, I concur in Part I of thе court’s opinion and in the judgment.
. The court’s opinion contains extended discussions of an agent's ability to vary the terms of his own agency, perhaps by making promises that directly contradict the text of the contract. Unreviewed decisions of administrative law judges supply the principal authority for these propositions. They are unnecessary to the opinion. The court can consider the propriety of these decisions when they are presented, and this is not such a case.
. Both sides assume that state law governs the period of limitations. Usually, however, resort to state law stems from the fact that Congress creates rights of action but omits any federal period of limitations. The securities and commodities laws contain federal periods of limitation, and perhaps these should be our points of reference. See Norris v. Wirtz,
